Friday, November 12, 2010

Nothin' Says Lovin' Like Somethin' From the Kachelofen

Huh?  Let me begin at the beginning.  I received Lee's Marie Antoinette journal a few weeks ago but only got to it this week.  Her sub-theme is recipes and events where the recipe would be appropriate.
Here's how my brain jumped from thought to thought to.... I made up a story in my mind that Marie would at times like to play at being a commoner, and serve up some treats for her kiddies that she herself prepared.  I don't have a clue if this is true or not, but it's a nice idea, so I ran with it.
Then.....I remembered that Marie was not actually French, but Austrian.   This took me back several lifetimes ago to a summer spent wandering about with a Eurail pass and a copy of  Europe on $5 A Day. 

A few wonderful days were spent in Salzburgand I definitely remembered touring a castle and gawking at these huge and gorgeous tiled stoves.  I did a little google search and found many beautiful examples.  From this, my pages were born.

A recipe for Parisian macarons, and  Marie with her hand in the oven  kachelofen, getting ready to remove a tray of the dainty morsels for her hungry offspring.

Again, a disclaimer....I made this all up.  Did Marie actually grow up in Austria with kachelofens?   Did she miss them and have one brought to France?  I don't know.  But it made for a good story in my head and I thought, some fun pages to do.

So, here's cookin' with Marie:

Both backgrounds were done with Stampin' Up paper called Presto Patterns.  The paper looks blank, but when you add color (I used Adirondack Colorwash in eggplant and Perfect Pearls Mist in forever violet), the "hidden" embossed pattern emerges.  Makes for an easy and beautiful background.

The recipe (thanks to Martha Stewart, LOL) was printed on vellum.
For the kitchen page.....I printed a photograph of an actual old kachelofen, added color with glaze pens and pastels, and a lot of bling with german scrap, crystals, stickers and enamel accents.

Marie herself is a graphic I snagged from Val (my go-to gal for great images), and I dressed her with ribbon and flowers and bling.

My little narrative (remember, all a figment of my imagination) was also printed on vellum.  The title banner above it is a cool embellishment left over from one of the cruise projects.  It's from Pinkpaislee, and it is a rubbery product, originally white.  I used copper paint on it and some brown ink to age it a bit. 

8 comments:

Tammy D said...

Love it!

Unknown said...

Dern, your photograohy is so bad(like mine) I will have to wait till the book comes home to steal the recipe LOL!
I love the pages you did for me,sorry the book was so large.I much prefer to work large when possible you can fit so much more on AND God gave me 10 thumbs,dont you love those people who can photograph their breakfast and make it look like an intersting work of art!

Lori said...

What a story! Always awesome to see what your thought process is.. I really enjoy that part.. Wonderful pages, and yes that background is beautiful!

Anonymous said...

Beautiful pieces of art... I love them...

Angie Hall Haviland said...

OH WOW...STUNNING pages, Eileen!! Just ABSOLUTELY Love them!

Anonymous said...

Hello Eileen,

I really like how this project evolved in your head to a whole story !
This could have been true and if not, maybe it was something she could have wished for !

Never saw or heard anything about the papers you used, but they do give a very nice background.

You make me curious about the recipe too...
I like how you used a print of the kacheloven and made it a royal , blingy thing!

greetings from belgium
Inge

Heidi Bound said...

Eileen, I love the colors that you picked for this project. So beautiful! I have two packs of that Stampin' Up! paper and forgot about it. What a beautiful effect...I need to get the plastic wrapper off of that paper and use it!

Patzee said...

Of course you went back to Marie's roots to reveal her childhood love of cake. Great job with the kachelofen and recipe finds. Plus, you totally rocked that SU! paper. You are a master at the art of bringing your Alternate Marie Antoinette to life! What a gal!!